16 Quotes & Sayings By Graham Spaid

Graham Spaid is a published author and poet. His writing credits include the story, “The Embers”, in the 2012 anthology The Collected Works of Graham Spaid. He has been a freelance writer since 2008, and his work has been published in various publications, including Fabula Magazine, Eclectica Magazine, Creative Loafing Tampa Bay, and Creative Loafing Orlando.

1
Some people say he engineered his own arrest to gain an insight into modern methods of policing for a thriller he had planned. But you know what happens to artistic rats in prison: they have their rectums stretched, and not by overindulgence in Michelin-star food; they have their columns examined, and not by internet humorists or a qualified medical practitioner. I’m sure Rat knew this, too. Although he likes to accumulate a wide general knowledge, he would rather have a narrow rectum. A colon comes in handy here, before examples: two dots on top of one other, like the cowboys who copulate on Brokeback Mountain, on a slope so far away you need binoculars to see them properly. In prison there are too many insights and examples. Rat would never risk it. . Graham Spaid
2
Olga was better, in the sun, where he could see every pore in her skin. Get closer. Feel her next to him. It was all he wanted in the world. It was the last thing in the world that he could do. Graham Spaid
3
The sexual contact before this?“ It was the first time.” The woman looked at Rat again, harder. The silence was more painful than the words. What she had just heard went beyond plain immorality. It was ridiculous. Graham Spaid
4
The expected battle hadn’t taken place, yet something else had. Images of the entertainment which had just gone down were already coming back into Rat’s head. It had been wonderful to watch, unbelievably wonderful, the enactment of several plays at once on a single stage, and Rat was sorry it was over, but in a way it was even better to relive it now in the privacy of his mind. He hadn’t believed the boy-doctor and that stuff about the condom being used or warm, but he had gone along with it and the emotion which it powered. Everybody had. The emotion was the most important thing. He wondered how he could ever put such a chaotic, hilarious, sad thing down on paper, organise it into scenes or verses and fix his own pewiod at the end. He could never do it justice. He would never get that emotion back. Graham Spaid
5
…he’d assumed their relationship would go on forever. It was going on now, but in another way, like the rearrangement of the stars, which were all still in the sky, just burning in unexpected places. Graham Spaid
6
We just move on, don’t we, with traitors still amongst us? But there was one thought that wouldn’t go away. If I loved him, I would forgive him. Graham Spaid
7
But this bus was a bit too full. The driver only appeared to control the glass and metal around him. In reality, he was at the nose of a travelling paroxysm. Graham Spaid
8
I guess if you get too close, the twinkling stops; they don’t look like stars anymore. Graham Spaid
9
I wouldn't dignify it with the name immoral. Graham Spaid
10
You know what people are doing on the other side of the world, what’s happening on another planet, but not what’s going on inside the person next to you. Graham Spaid
11
Were the stars against him? A woman's fingers are quicker in the sky and shine more brightly. Graham Spaid
12
We put our flags in soil when we arrive, as if it now belongs to us and we know where we are. Graham Spaid
13
The world is indeed a cold, hard stone. Graham Spaid
14
A nose is ordinarily naked. A nose isn’t nipple, although there are similarities. Graham Spaid
15
The emotion was the most important thing. Graham Spaid